I'm at the point where the frame is complete, suspension and steering in, and the engine block is at the machine shop. When the block comes back and I've assembled it, I'd like to start it and seat the cam. Actually, I'd like to start it and make sure everything is good to go so I don't wait months and have to pull it from a freshly-painted body. Far easier to yank when just sitting on a frame.
My question is are there any tips/tricks that would be helpful? Things to watch out for? Recommendations to guage oil pressure, temp, vacuum, and RPM? (Keeping in mind we're talking about a 1980, so the dash guages would be electrical...I'd prefer the real deal for startup, however.)
Since the engine will be running outside the normal support system (key ignition at the very least), I'd have to rig up a remote starter, set up the battery to the starter, fuel delivery won't be per normal (fuel from a can, not the tank), cooling when the radiator isn't in its normal place, etc.
I did see what this guy did: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_I_aVcAsII Love the blue lab coat.
Anyway, thoughts? Better/safer way to do it? (I could buy an engine stand, but...)
My question is are there any tips/tricks that would be helpful? Things to watch out for? Recommendations to guage oil pressure, temp, vacuum, and RPM? (Keeping in mind we're talking about a 1980, so the dash guages would be electrical...I'd prefer the real deal for startup, however.)
Since the engine will be running outside the normal support system (key ignition at the very least), I'd have to rig up a remote starter, set up the battery to the starter, fuel delivery won't be per normal (fuel from a can, not the tank), cooling when the radiator isn't in its normal place, etc.
I did see what this guy did: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=w_I_aVcAsII Love the blue lab coat.
Anyway, thoughts? Better/safer way to do it? (I could buy an engine stand, but...)
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